Interpretation as luxury: Heart patients living with data doubt, hope, and anxiety

Personal health technologies such as apps and wearables that generate health and behavior data close to the individual patient are envisioned to enable personalized healthcare - and self-care. And yet, they are consumer devices. Proponents of these devices presuppose that measuring will be helpful,...

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Main Authors: Stine Lomborg, Henriette Langstrup, Tariq Osman Andersen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-05-01
Series:Big Data & Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2053951720924436
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spelling doaj-8f0c7f6393324c4da7f1437eb9bea8522020-11-25T03:19:00ZengSAGE PublishingBig Data & Society2053-95172020-05-01710.1177/2053951720924436Interpretation as luxury: Heart patients living with data doubt, hope, and anxietyStine LomborgHenriette LangstrupTariq Osman AndersenPersonal health technologies such as apps and wearables that generate health and behavior data close to the individual patient are envisioned to enable personalized healthcare - and self-care. And yet, they are consumer devices. Proponents of these devices presuppose that measuring will be helpful, and that data will be meaningful. However, a growing body of research suggests that self-tracking data does not necessarily make sense to users. Drawing together data studies and digital health research, we aim to further research on data ambivalence, a term we use to refer to the ambiguities and uncertainties people experience when interpreting their own data, as well as the critical obligation towards cultivating ethically sound uses and responses to such data in context. We develop the relationship between data, interpretation, and context as a central theoretical and practical problem in the datafication of healthcare. We then show how interpretation and context matter for data ambivalence through an empirical study of heart patients with an implanted advanced pacemaker who were offered a Fitbit wristband for self-tracking as part of a research project. We argue that the hope, anxiety, and doubt connected to the promise and accuracy of data are tempered by the context and purpose of self-tracking, and by individual circumstances. Finally, we link the findings on context-sensitivity in data interpretation to questions about response-ability in cloud-based care infrastructures. We discuss the ethical dilemmas associated with the use of commercial wellness-technologies in healthcare, and with researching such emerging practices.https://doi.org/10.1177/2053951720924436
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stine Lomborg
Henriette Langstrup
Tariq Osman Andersen
spellingShingle Stine Lomborg
Henriette Langstrup
Tariq Osman Andersen
Interpretation as luxury: Heart patients living with data doubt, hope, and anxiety
Big Data & Society
author_facet Stine Lomborg
Henriette Langstrup
Tariq Osman Andersen
author_sort Stine Lomborg
title Interpretation as luxury: Heart patients living with data doubt, hope, and anxiety
title_short Interpretation as luxury: Heart patients living with data doubt, hope, and anxiety
title_full Interpretation as luxury: Heart patients living with data doubt, hope, and anxiety
title_fullStr Interpretation as luxury: Heart patients living with data doubt, hope, and anxiety
title_full_unstemmed Interpretation as luxury: Heart patients living with data doubt, hope, and anxiety
title_sort interpretation as luxury: heart patients living with data doubt, hope, and anxiety
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Big Data & Society
issn 2053-9517
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Personal health technologies such as apps and wearables that generate health and behavior data close to the individual patient are envisioned to enable personalized healthcare - and self-care. And yet, they are consumer devices. Proponents of these devices presuppose that measuring will be helpful, and that data will be meaningful. However, a growing body of research suggests that self-tracking data does not necessarily make sense to users. Drawing together data studies and digital health research, we aim to further research on data ambivalence, a term we use to refer to the ambiguities and uncertainties people experience when interpreting their own data, as well as the critical obligation towards cultivating ethically sound uses and responses to such data in context. We develop the relationship between data, interpretation, and context as a central theoretical and practical problem in the datafication of healthcare. We then show how interpretation and context matter for data ambivalence through an empirical study of heart patients with an implanted advanced pacemaker who were offered a Fitbit wristband for self-tracking as part of a research project. We argue that the hope, anxiety, and doubt connected to the promise and accuracy of data are tempered by the context and purpose of self-tracking, and by individual circumstances. Finally, we link the findings on context-sensitivity in data interpretation to questions about response-ability in cloud-based care infrastructures. We discuss the ethical dilemmas associated with the use of commercial wellness-technologies in healthcare, and with researching such emerging practices.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2053951720924436
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